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U.S. Marines in Battle An-Najaf - August 2004 (Paperback)
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U.S. Marines in Battle An-Najaf - August 2004 (Paperback)
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Loot Price R402
Discovery Miles 4 020
Expected to ship within 10 - 15 working days
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The city of an-Najaf, Iraq, is a provincial and market center
located on the western branch of the Euphrates River approximately
100 miles south of Baghdad. Its population (prewar) of 563,000
expands at times with pilgrims to this important center of Islamic
scholarship and theology. It is the location of several significant
shrines for Shi'a Muslims and boasts one of the largest cemeteries
in the world. Its more recent history has been marked by conflict
of a political nature as the place of exile for Ayatollah Khomeini
and site of the assassination of Ayatollah Mohammad Sadiq. It
served as the location of Shi'a resistance to perceived political
oppression and was a place of battle once more in 2004. This is a
"battle study" written purposely from the perspective of the
Marines, soldiers, and sailors who fought at an-Najaf in August
2004. Some context is needed to fit these events within the
evolution of the campaigning in Iraq in 2004. The Americans
deployed to al-Anbar and an-Najaf Provinces, faced a variety of
threats as Iraq attempted to again govern itself. Threats were from
disparate sources, including Sunni Fighters in Fallujah and Shi'a
fighters in Najaf. Behind each was the possibility of al-Qaeda in
Iraq or criminal exploitation of any disruption of Coalition
efforts to establish responsible Iraqi Government. This complexity
of threats did not lend itself to easy solutions. In March 2004,
Lieutenant General James T. Conway's I Marine Expeditionary Force
was faced with an outbreak of Sunni insurgency in Fallujah. At the
same time, a Shi'a uprising took place across Iraq, including
Baghdad, Najaf, an-Nasiriyah, al-Kut, al-Amarah, and Kirkuk. The
fighting spread to Karbala, Hillah, and Basrah with attacks on
Iraqi and Coalition outposts. The fighting dropped off in June with
the establishment of the Iraqi Interim Government of Prime Minister
Ayad Allawi, but the menace of further violence remained. The
Multi-National Force-Iraq, under General George W. Casey Jr., USA,
felt that before the Iraqis could be responsible for security in
each province, the centers of violence had to be dealt with by a
"clear-hold-build" approach. Baghdad, Fallujah, and Najaf were thus
targeted. When Muqtada al-Sadr fomented another uprising in August,
the recently arrived 11th Marine Expeditionary Unit found itself
assigned to quell the uprising in Najaf. It would be reinforced for
this effort by two U.S. Army and four Iraqi Army battalions. This
narrative documents this effort from the small-unit level. The
importance of the close relationship between political and military
force is emphasized. The intent is to provide a view of combat for
the education and training of Marines who might face similar
circumstances.
General
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